The diaries also covers his two major relationships as well. I enjoyed the mini-series as well. A very interesting man to be sure.
|
I only knew the basics about Andy Warhol, and like you Adidasss, I was expecting the Factory, the transvestites and Velvet Underground to be the main course meal of the series. It was interesting to discover that The Velvets especially were just a brief peripheral element in this guy's life. As you say, rubber soul, a very interesting man.
The actor who reads Andy's words does a great job of bringing him to life, as I imagine him to have been. I particularly enjoyed the trip to Coney Island, but also the later collab with the young graffiti artist. But most of all I like the message that slowly seeps into your soul from Andy's pages: that good or bad, life goes on. After a worrisome day, I find something very soothing about the deadpan recital, the tone of resigned acceptance, that Andy used for his diaries. For more on AW, this movie isn't as sensationalised as the trailer suggests. Well worth watching if you haven't seen it already:- |
Anyone know of any half-decent British (or Nordic or whatever) procedurals on Netflix? If I enjoyed Line of Duty and hated every single Harlan Coben adaptation, then I should like...
|
Watching Ghost Wars. Science portal ghost something something.. yeah it’s not very good.
|
Quote:
For Nordic, well there are so many. I found La Promesse (The Promise duh) to be pretty exceptional, then there's When the Dust Settles, Cry Wolf, Snow Angels, Angel of Death, Raven... depends on what you're looking for. A similar show to LoD, much older, is Between the Lines, which I found quite good. |
Quote:
One nordic noir I really liked was the first season of Trapped. The second season, less so. |
https://s3.amazonaws.com/static.roge...hs-poster.jpeg
Just finished the first (of 3) segments of Jeen-yuhs on Netflix. It was interesting to see that he struggled a lot for the initial break and had to really fight for it. It's watchable because it's before he became a humongous asshole. He's just an awkward kid with braces, hopeful that he will make it but not all that sure about his rapping abilities. It's kind of endearing to see him get approval from established rappers of the era. I guess the next chapters will be much more uncomfortable as we see him evolve from this talented, motivated but awkward and insecure kid into the giant mess we all know him as today. :/ The narration is really annoying though, the intonation is like a kid rehearsing lines for a school play. |
Quote:
I remember liking Silent witness when Amanda Burton was in the lead role. It has a million seasons though and not sure what the quality was like after her departure. Prime suspect with Helen Mirren. Foyle's war is set during WWII. Cadfael is set during the middle ages (more mystery than procedural). I enjoyed The stranger also. Again more mystery than procedural. |
Quote:
Cadfael sounds interesting! What I really need is something like that or Foyle's War but set during the English Civil Wars, the historical period I can't stop reading about these days. Should watch Prime Suspect, it's often mentioned in the same breath as the outstanding Robbie Coltrane vehicle Cracker. Mystery is great, for me it's interchangeable with procedurals, either can do the job if the mood is right and it's not too stupid. Will give The Stranger a try, though there's something about this Coben's writing that rubs me the wrong way (the sentimentality maybe?). Someone told me the Korean show The Stranger that's also on Netflix is fantastic. Thanks. Started La Promesse, very good show. |
For the ECW, I believe a very old show called By the Sword Divided is worth watching. I literally watched it when I was at school (so, say 45 years ago or more) and I think it's one of those BBC period dramas. If you haven't seen it, though it's a movie rather than a series, Richard Harris in Cromwell is tremendous viewing. Again, it's old, maybe 1960s/70s.
I tried Cracker and have to say I hated it with a passion. I also was surprised to find that after I thoroughly enjoyed Prime Suspect 1973, the prequel, I truly hated Prime Suspect, my main issue being that when they couldn't prove the guy did it he conveniently and for no good reason at all confessed. Now I know it's La Plante, but that is some damned lazy writing. Silent Witness only got better as it went on. I've seen all seasons, and I have to say it stands out as one of the few shows where people - and I mean, main characters, top talent - are killed off, and I think this makes it very fresh for me. I'm just going to assume you've seen Hill Street Blues duh, and other than that in terms of police procedurals of course The Wire again duh but The District is pretty cool too (Craig T Nelson from Coach) and there are plenty of true-life dramas such as A Confession (Martin Freeman), Honour, Whitechapel Farm and Lucan, all worth a look. Can't say I'm with you on Coben, though I've only seen The Five, and thoroughly enjoyed that. |
All times are GMT -6. The time now is 12:08 PM. |
© 2003-2024 Advameg, Inc.